One woman in a dirty blouse talks to a Chinese officer while others stare nervously at the ground as US-China...The first video footage showing seven Koreans presumed to be sex slaves for Japanese troops during World War II was unveiled Wednesday, which researchers claim supports existing evidence and testimonies of Japan's brutal trafficking of Asian women into front-line brothels.Several South Korean victims, including at least six of the women who sued the South Korean government, said they will reject payments offered from the foundation.Under the December agreement, described by both governments as "irreversible", Japan pledged to fund the foundation to help support the victims.Many studies have been criticized for their unreliable data.

In other photos, women are seen being interrogated or receiving medical treatments. Fay, a photographer from the allied forces, had taken the photo as well as the video, researchers said.However, there is little decent scholarly work (Zhang et al., 2007) on sex trafficking .As with journalistic literature, the available studies on sex trafficking concentrate on several anecdotal and extreme cases of sex trafficking, rather than shedding light on the diverse nature and realities of sex trafficking (Bales, 2005; Hughes, 2000; Raymond et al., 2001).Sex trafficking is a significant problem and is described as “the most common form of modern-day slavery” (Walker-Rodriguez & Hill, 2011).Recently a vast body of journalistic literature has been written, much of which sensationalizes the phenomenon; this literature has allowed even ordinary people to discover what sex trafficking is and how grotesque the process is, regardless of whether their knowledge is based on reliable data (Bales & Soodalter, 2009; De Stefano, 2007; Kara, 2009).